Don Boyd
One of the leaders of the hunting party, Don has "the youngest face of them all, darkly aquiline, handsome and ruthless and saturnine" (268). The story reveals his ruthlessness in several ways, beginning with his driving and ending with his abandonment of the woman he had an affair with and the child they conceived together. He seems to think money can settle his moral and emotional debts. A veteran of the first World War, he is cynical about America and "women and children" (270). Although he is introduced as one "of the sons of [Ike McCaslin's] old companions" (268), when Boyd violates both the game laws and Ike's hunting code by shooting a female deer with a shotgun, he seems to represent the pattern of generational decline. (When Faulkner revised the story for inclusion in Go Down, Moses, the part of Don Boyd was re-assigned to Roth Edmonds.)
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